New world number one Stuart Broad calls Dale Steyn the 'bowler of our generation'

London: Stuart Broad, who has risen to number one in the world Test bowler rankings, has called South Africa quick Dale Steyn the "bowler of our generation". Broad's record of 333 wickets in 91 Tests at an average of 28.66 is worthy of considerable respect, but Steyn's figures of 406 wickets in 82 Tests at 22.53 stands comparison with all-time greats such as West Indies' Malcolm Marshall, Australia's Dennis Lillee and England's Fred Trueman, all of whom had Test bowling averages in the early 20s.

"On the ranking, I'm certainly not going to sit here and say I'm a better bowler than Dale Steyn — I've said before he
is the bowler of our generation," Broad said in London on Thursday, at an event staged ahead of next week's first Test between England and Sri Lanka at Headingley.

File image of Stuart Broad. Reuters

"It's very nice to be at the top of the rankings, but for me it's really come through playing a lot of cricket," added Broad, who at 29 is three years younger than Steyn. "I've played 40-odd Tests on the bounce now, so I've been out there having the opportunity to take wickets and bowling within a unit that's creating a lot of pressure. It's always nice when you do get to a ranking like that, but it's not something I focus on a huge amount."

The Nottinghamshire seamer now has a narrow lead at the top of the Test standings over India off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin. Broad, the son of former England opening batsman turned International Cricket Council match referee Chris Broad, was clear where his goals lay. "For me, it's all about trying to take top-order wickets and get us into a winning position," he said. "When you finish your career, you don't look back on where you got to in the rankings, you look back on Test match wins and what the team wins."

Broad has a reputation of being something of a streaky bowler, who only occasionally produces unplayable spells — such as the one on his Trent Bridge home ground last year where his stunning return of eight for 15 set up England's Ashes series-clinching win over Australia. But he said he has become increasingly consistent. "I feel with a bit of experience, I know what I'm looking for as a bowler now, I know what tempo I'm trying to find in my run-up. I feel like I can adapt to different conditions quicker. When I was my learning my trade, up until 25 or 26, I only seemed to strike when conditions were really in my favour. The more I've played in different conditions now, the more I've realised you have to adapt your game quickly in Test cricket to survive."

Broad's new-ball partnership with James Anderson has become one of the most celebrated in English cricket history.
But they've generally been known as 'Anderson and Broad', with the Lancashire seamer, England's all-time leading Test wicket-taker, having the privilege of choice of ends. "I've never bowled down the hill at Headingley, that's my
aim next week — to try to get a spell down the hill," joked Broad ahead of the first of a three-Test series against Sri
Lanka starting at Yorkshire's headquarters in Leeds, northern England, on 19 May. "I'm not a big away swinger, Jimmy always swings the ball away, so the dream is a bit of a cross-wind. He can choose the end that helps him
swing it away."